Friday, April 25, 2014

Okay. Today we have Augustine's query again, this time with my feedback, in blue.

The letter:

Dear [ ],

[THIS PARAGRAPH WOULD BE TAILORED TO AN AGENT] I read that you look for fiction that introduces readers to a fully realized world, and a voice that no one can forget.Not necessary, or if this is part of your personalization, because you read an interview where they mentioned this bit specifically, make sure you tailor that line to each individual agent.I am hoping that you will find all this and more in my adult novel coming-of-age debut, Think of the Children. It is complete at 97,000 words. You don't really need any of this either. It's implied. Also, working-titles of unpublished manuscripts go in ALL CAPS in query letters, so it would be THINK OF THE CHILDREN. Also, you can get all this across in the subject of your email, which should look something like this: QUERY - THINK OF THE CHILDREN by Augustine Chan. Word count and genre should go at the end of the query, where you compare this story to other works. I'll talk about genre later.

Daniel Hoover, a twelve-year(-)old latch-key kid, lives in a small, rural A little redundant, but not a huge problem. Midwestern town. He has a special bond with his mother, but she holds down three part-time jobs to make ends meet and he never sees her. In her absence, he has to look after his mentally-challenged younger brother, keep the household running, and balance his mother’s checkbook. In spite of this, he has never been in trouble at school, and manages to become a division-level wrestling champion with an unblemished academic record.

This isn't a bad opening as far at nuts and bolts go. It's got a sympathetic young character we can care about and root for, and while it doesn't really get to any kind of inciting incident yet, it sets up a situation which seems ripe for conflict. That said, it reads as very dry and lacking any real voice or style. I'm under the impression that even though this is a story about a child, it's more of a literary novel told by a narrator with an adult's sensibilities. If that's true, you do want to be careful about voice, since you certainly wouldn't want to practice writing a query from Daniel's first person point of view if this is not actually a Middle Grade novel.

Daniel has everything going for him. Except a dad or a mom who's ever home. He believes his life would change completely if he won a sports scholarship to the elite Fieldstone Place Academy. If he succeeds, he’ll be able to rise above his family’s staggering poverty and the weight of his mother’s expectations. Today, a recruiter will be visiting, watching him during practice and informally interviewing him after. But the school bully, Sammy, is out to get him, and has promised to ruin his interview. By the end of the day, in one terrible moment, Daniel’s entire world is shattered. This is vague. Avoid vague language in query letters like the plague. Be specific, and hold nothing back. Unless there is some serious O'Henry twist to the ending, you can just say exactly what happens in a query letter.

Again, this is strong in substance if not in form. Is the story really all told in a single day? This query makes it seem that way. I'm struggling a little with what to tell you about how to improve this. You've got the facts down, and they make it clear there are interesting elements to this story, but they come across as just that, a series of facts, with no emotion to the language used to present them.

By turns poignant and tragic, Don't do this. Don't tell an agent what the strong points of your writing and story are, show them with your query and your pages.Think of the ChildrenTHINK OF THE CHILDREN is a cautionary tale about bullying, a critical dissection of a child’s indomitable spirit and fire against all odds, and a deeply movingThe reader will decide if they are moved or not. Not the writer. story of hardship and hard-won triumph. The book captures, without flinching, those moments in the day of a life forever altered by the actions we do and do not take; and the story of a person turned away from his natural path, turned to a new way of being. It is akin to Tobias Wolff’s This Boy’s LifeThis Boy’s Life (titles of published works go in italics in query letters) and, more recently, Jean Kwok’s Girl in TranslationGirl in Translation. I don't know these books, but it sounds like you know your market. But rather than saying akin, can you say something like "it will appeal to fans of X, because of Y?" That makes it a little clearer why you're comparing your MS to a particular book.I would also include your word count and genre in this paragraph. It's best to keep all of that "housekeeping" type info in one place.

I received my MFA from Columbia and for three years I was the assistant to the editor of Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards. Twice I was a writing fellow at the writer’s colony, Artcroft. This is all excellent. Columbia is a great school!

Upon your request, I would be happy to provide the complete manuscript or the first three chapters. Don't tell the agent what you'd be willing to send them. You'd be willing to send them whatever pages they ask for. Full manuscripts or the first three chapters are certainly standard requests, but make sure to check and follow the agent's guidelines. Thank you for taking the time to consider my work, and look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Augustine Reyes Chan

In summary, you've got the bones of an excellent query here. A sympathetic protagonist is there, even if we struggle to care about him a little bit because his situation in represented as facts rather than emotions. The conflict and stakes are also clear, even if, again, they come across a little dry. If this was a Middle Grade novel, I'd know exactly what to tell you to do to improve it, but considering it's an adult novel, you might actually be better off without overdoing voice. That said, I do think you could do with a little more active voice in your sentence structure. Just for example, cutting an opening like "He believes," would make the rest of the sentence carry that much more impact. There are several places you could cut words like this to simplify structure and pack more of a punch.This is a tough query to critique, because it has all the necessary elements, and style and voice can be such a subjective thing to evaluate. Make sure you take a look at my past query critiques, and analysis of successful queries, to get an idea of what works and what doesn't.

That's it!

What do you all think? Can you suggest anything I've missed that might make this query connect a little less with the head and a little more with the heart?

NOTE: I forgot to share this yesterday, but you can find Augustine on:

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Happy Thursday, everybody. It's been a little while since I've had a query to critique, so please remember to spread the word: I do this for free, for anyone who asks, and all you have to do is email me.

I'm not sure how Augustine found me, or whether he has a blog of his own (please link in the comments if you do, Augustine!) but the important thing is that I enjoy doing this, because writers helping writers is a passion of mine, and because there is honestly no better way to learn to improve your own writing than by spending time in deep analysis of what works and what doesn't about other people's work.

With that, his query:

Dear [ ],

[THIS PARAGRAPH WOULD BE TAILORED TO AN AGENT] I read that you look for fiction that introduces readers to a fully realized world, and a voice that no one can forget. I am hoping that you will find all this and more in my adult novel coming-of-age debut, Think of the Children. It is complete at 97,000 words.

Daniel Hoover, a twelve-year old latch-key kid, lives in a small, rural Midwestern town. He has a special bond with his mother, but she holds down three part-time jobs to make ends meet and he never sees her. In her absence, he has to look after his mentally-challenged younger brother, keep the household running, and balance his mother’s checkbook. In spite of this, he has never been in trouble at school, and manages to become a division-level wrestling champion with an unblemished academic record.

Daniel has everything going for him. He believes his life would change completely if he won a sports scholarship to the elite Fieldstone Place Academy. If he succeeds, he’ll be able to rise above his family’s staggering poverty and the weight of his mother’s expectations. Today, a recruiter will be visiting, watching him during practice and informally interviewing him after. But the school bully, Sammy, is out to get him, and has promised to ruin his interview. By the end of the day, in one terrible moment, Daniel’s entire world is shattered.

By turns poignant and tragic, Think of the Children is a cautionary tale about bullying, a critical dissection of a child’s indomitable spirit and fire against all odds, and a deeply moving story of hardship and hard-won triumph. The book captures, without flinching, those moments in the day of a life forever altered by the actions we do and do not take; and the story of a person turned away from his natural path, turned to a new way of being. It is akin to Tobias Wolff’s This Boy’s Life and, more recently, Jean Kwok’s Girl in Translation.

I received my MFA from Columbia and for three years I was the assistant to the editor of Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards. Twice I was a writing fellow at the writer’s colony, Artcroft.

Upon your request, I would be happy to provide the complete manuscript or the first three chapters. Thank you for taking the time to consider my work, and look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Augustine Reyes Chan

That's it!

Please save your feedback for tomorrow, and thank Augustine for sharing in the comments.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Every once in a while, a friend updates a book they have out, and I like to try to help spread the word when that happens. Stella is a friend of mine from back in the day when I actually used to still blog a lot, and her book, ACROSS THE WIRE, has a great new cover:

Isn't that an awesome cover?

Here is the summary:

When Mia Mitchell, a hardcore but lonely former Marine, steps into an alley to pull some thugs off an unlucky foreigner, she walks into a fight she expects. What she doesn’t see coming is the foreigner making her a job offer any sane person would refuse. So, she takes it. She thinks she’s headed for some third-world country; instead she’s mysteriously transported to an Earth-like parallel world. That’s a mad left-hook.

Mia discovers a matriarchal dystopia where freedom doesn’t exist and fighting for it means execution. Lethal force bends all to the law; women fear for their families and un-wed men suffer slavery. Mia’s job is to train an underground syndicate of male freedom-fighters for a violent revolution. However, the guys don’t want a pair of X chromosomes showing them the way.

Eben, an escaped slave, is encouraged by Mia to become a leader among the men. But when he turns his quiet determination on her, it spells F.U.B.A.R. for cynical Mia. Their unexpected connection threatens more than her exit strategy; it threatens the power struggle festering with in the syndicate.

Haunted by nightmares and post-traumatic stress, unsure who to trust or how to get home, Mia struggles to stay alive as she realizes all is not what it seems.

And here is some more info about Stella:

All my life I’ve dreamed of stories or have had my nose buried in one. I live in Edmonton, Canada with my husband and my weird sense of humor.

I love old war movies, dystopian fiction, and any story with action, a good plot, and characters I'd get into a fight at the pub for. Not that I'm a brawler or anything. Unless you think that out-of-print book or vintage piece at the thrift shop is going home with you instead of me. Then, my friend, the gloves are off.

The QQQE Massive.

Who Am I?

I'm the father of two beautiful young ladies, three lazy cats and one adorable German Shepherd. Together we live in the mountains of north Georgia amid my endless collection of vinyl records.
I run this blog in an attempt to help other novice writers avoid the mistakes I made in the beginning of my road to publication. Believe me, I made many.